© Gerald Davis

Watching "Testament" 1986, 2006
pencil on paper, 38 x 50 inches


Gerald Davis
1986



John Connelly Presents is pleased to announce an exhibition of new drawings by Gerald Davis. This exhibition, titled "1986," is part of an ongoing autobiographical drawing and painting project begun by the artist in 2001. Throughout this series, Davis has created images made from memory of pivotal events that often focus on subjects of a foreboding, mysterious and/or sexual nature. Davis' previous subjects have included a student's illicit thoughts regarding his teacher, embarrassing pre-date anxieties, fetishized sexual games, strange and disconcerting tattoos, tragic schoolboy crushes, brutal hazing rituals and licentious gang initiations.


Davis' exploration of the dark, mysterious and disturbing continues with the eleven drawings on view at JCP in the exhibition "1986." Focusing on a pivotal year in the artist's childhood/adolescence, Davis's new body of work depicts specific cultural references that reflect the anxieties and fears of an impressionable youth coming of age in the late Cold War era. Davis's trademark, keen draughtsman ship and attention to poignant cultural details, can be seen in "Watching 'Testament'", a lush black & white pencil drawing of a young boy in front of a television watching the eponymous film about a nuclear Armageddon in America. As the boy, with gaping mouth, watches a scene between a mother and her dying child, hobgoblins of destruction rise from the boy's Vuarnet t-shirt logo and swirl about his spine and head. Davis's choice of subject matter and his acute attention to detail reflect not only the anxieties of an era where the nightmare of instant obliteration by nuclear bomb was a continued reality but reflect how mass media and cultural symbols become indelible icons of our fears and desires.


Davis' interest in the impressionable realities of life's polarities such as sex and death and mass culture's co-dependent enabling strategies is also reflected in the diptych "ET and Grandma" and the work "The Rumor". Rendered in crimson colored pencil "ET and Grandma" shows the artist's grandmother in a hospital room on her death-bed, her abject stillness as she lies curled in a fetal position is counter balanced by the animated alien in the work's companion piece where ET levitates a diverse group of objects for a rapt audience of youngsters. The light entertainment and diversion that the fictitious movie character offers contrasts with the real pain and struggle experienced by the artist's dying relative and suggests a leveling of the disconnection one is expected to experience between reality and fiction. In "The Rumor", we see the belly, groin and thighs of a robed man as he prepares to insert his semi-flaccid penis into the aluminum hose of an old Electrolux. In these works, death, sex and entertainment become a confused amalgam of both pageantry and tragedy where everyday reality is fused with both the fantastic and the pathetically mundane.


Gerald Davis was born in 1974 in Pittsburgh and received a BFA from the Pennsylvania State University in 1997 and an MFA from the Art Institute of Chicago in 1999. This will be the Los Angeles based artist's first solo exhibition in New York.


Paintings by Gerald Davis will be on view concurrently at Salon 94. The catalog "Gerald Davis: Drawings, 2002 - 2006" was produced to accompany this exhibition and will be available for purchase at the gallery.


Exhibition: September 7 - October 14, 2006
Gallery hours: Tues-Sat 11am - 6pm


John Connelly Presents
625 West 27th Street, Ground floor
USA-New York, NY 10001
Telephone +1 212 337 9563
Fax +1 212 337 9613
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